The Maritime Union of Australia v Stradbroke Ferries Pty Ltd
[2014] FWC 5946
•28 AUGUST 2014
| [2014] FWC 5946 |
| FAIR WORK COMMISSION |
STATEMENT |
Fair Work Act 2009
s.229 - Applications for bargaining orders
The Maritime Union of Australia
v
Stradbroke Ferries Pty Ltd
(B2014/1045)
Stradbroke Ferries Pty Ltdv
The Maritime Union of Australia, The Australian Institute of Marine and Power Engineers, The Australian Maritime Officers' Union, The Australian Workers' Union
(B2014/1290)
COMMISSIONER SIMPSON | BRISBANE, 28 AUGUST 2014 |
[1] Two separate applications have been made by the Maritime Union of Australia and Stradbroke Ferries Pty Ltd respectively for orders to be made by the Fair Work Commission (“the Commission”) regarding a failure to meet the good faith bargaining requirements under the Fair Work Act 2009 (“the Act”).
[2] Both applicants agreed to adjourn the two applications which were listed for hearing on Tuesday afternoon 26 August 2014 at 4.30pm, and further discussions took place in a conference conducted by the Commission yesterday at the premises of Stradbroke Ferries Pty Ltd at 3 Emmett Drive, Cleveland.
[3] I advised the bargaining representatives that participated in the conference yesterday that I intended to issue a statement concerning the treatment of discussions held in conference, and requested that the statement be provided to employees who are intended to be covered by the proposed Agreement.
[4] Section 592 of the Act reads as follows;
“592 Conferences
(1) For the purpose of performing a function or exercising a power of the FWC (other than a function or power under Part 2-6), the FWC may direct a person to attend a conference at a specified time and place.
Note: Part 2-6 deals with minimum wages. For the conduct of annual wage reviews, see Subdivision B of Division 3 of Part 2-6.
(2) An FWC Member (other than an Expert Panel Member), or a delegate of the FWC, is responsible for conducting the conference.
(3) The conference must be conducted in private, unless the person responsible for conducting the conference directs that it be conducted in public.
Note: This subsection does not apply in relation to conferences conducted in relation to unfair dismissal or general protection matters (see sections 368, 374, 398 and 776).
(4) At a conference, the FWC may:
(a) mediate or conciliate; or
(b) make a recommendation or express an opinion.
(5) Subsection (4) does not limit what the FWC may do at a conference.”
[5] Where a conference is conducted before the Commission, in the absence of a direction that it be conducted in public, or in the absence of an agreement reached between the parties to jointly communicate an outcome that is sanctioned by the person responsible for conducting the conference, the appropriate course is for participants in the conference to refrain from divulging outside the conference the contents of private discussions held in conference.
[6] The public policy rationale for this legislative approach as I understand it is that it is intended to promote more effective mediation or conciliation between parties in dispute because it allows those discussions to occur in private. Parties are generally free to report back to others agreed outcomes that result from private discussions (unless otherwise agreed or directed) but parties are not at liberty to report on the contents of the private discussions themselves.
COMMISSIONER
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